FX has ordered a fifth season of The Bear just one week after season 4 premiered on Hulu, with chairman John Landgraf hailing the series as “one of the best shows on television” and confirming that writers are already outlining episodes for a 2026 debut. The renewal extends a streak of momentum that has seen the Chicago-set dramedy win 21 Primetime Emmys and five Golden Globes across its first three seasons, cementing FX’s status as a prestige brand within Disney’s streaming empire.
Season 4 delivered Hulu’s strongest premiere of 2025, according to internal data disclosed by the network, outpacing Shōgun and Fargo to become the platform’s top launch since the Disney bundle expansion in March. Collider notes that the order arrived “on the heels” of those figures, signalling confidence in showrunner Christopher Storer’s long-term plan to track Carmy Berzatto’s attempt to scale his Michelin-seeking restaurant without losing family or sanity.
Not everyone is celebrating: Yahoo and Newsweek round-ups point to social posts worried that another season could stretch the premise, especially after critics questioned season 3’s pacing and celebrity cameos. ScreenRant counters that the writers’ room has “ample runway” because Storer shot seasons 3 and 4 back-to-back, leaving scheduling flexibility for cast members Jeremy Allen White and Ayo Edebiri, whose film commitments previously complicated production windows.
White told fans at a recent Chicago Q&A that he is “excited to keep cooking” but hopes Carmy will “actually sleep” next year, hinting at a narrative pivot toward work-life balance as the restaurant risks over-expansion. Local outlet Reel Chicago reports that crews expect to return to the city in early 2026, with the Illinois Film Office preparing an incentive package similar to the one that supported the show’s first four seasons.
Internationally, FX’s parent Disney will continue rolling out new episodes on Disney+ via the Star hub, while The Week says a linear run on the company’s recently announced ABC-Fox simulcast block is under consideration as part of a broader syndication push. Landgraf, who coined the phrase “Peak TV,” told Vanity Fair earlier this year that The Bear exemplifies FX’s commitment to “artisanal” storytelling—a philosophy the network is doubling down on as it battles for attention in a crowded streaming marketplace.